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Home/ Questions/Q 5995703
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T23:59:52+00:00 2026-05-22T23:59:52+00:00

How would I construct a regular expression to find all words that end in

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How would I construct a regular expression to find all words that end in a string but don’t begin with a string?

e.g. Find all words that end in ‘friend’ that don’t start with the word ‘girl’ in the following sentence:

“A boyfriend and girlfriend gained a friend when they asked to befriend them”

The items in bold should match. The word ‘girlfriend’ should not.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T23:59:53+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 11:59 pm

    Off the top of my head, you could try:

    \b             # word boundary - matches start of word
    (?!girl)       # negative lookahead for literal 'girl'
    \w*            # zero or more letters, numbers, or underscores
    friend         # literal 'friend'
    \b             # word boundary - matches end of word
    

    Update

    Here’s another non-obvious approach which should work in any modern implementation of regular expressions:

    Assuming you wish to extract a pattern which appears within multiple contexts but you only want to match if it appears in a specific context, you can use an alteration where you first specify what you don’t want and then capture what you do.

    So, using your example, to extract all of the words that either are or end in friend except girlfriend, you’d use:

    \b               # word boundary
    (?:              # start of non-capture group 
      girlfriend     # literal (note 1)
    |                # alternation
      (              # start of capture group #1 (note 2)
        \w*          # zero or more word chars [a-zA-Z_]
        friend       # literal 
      )              # end of capture group #1
    )                # end of non-capture group
    \b
    

    Notes:

    1. This is what we do not wish to capture.
    2. And this is what we do wish to capture.

    Which can be described as:

    • for all words
    • first, match ‘girlfriend’ and do not capture (discard)
    • then match any word that is or ends in ‘friend’ and capture it

    In Javascript:

    const target = 'A boyfriend and girlfriend gained a friend when they asked to befriend them';
    
    const pattern = /\b(?:girlfriend|(\w*friend))\b/g;
    
    let result = [];
    let arr;
    
    while((arr=pattern.exec(target)) !== null){
      if(arr[1]) {
        result.push(arr[1]);
      }
    }
    
    console.log(result);
    

    which, when run, will print:

    [ 'boyfriend', 'friend', 'befriend' ]
    
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